Sabrina 1995 «WORKING ✪»
The core story remains intact. Sabrina Fairchild (Julia Ormond), the shy, awkward daughter of a wealthy Long Island family’s chauffeur, has pined for the charming but frivolous youngest son, David Larrabee (Greg Kinnear), her entire life. After a stint in Paris (Vogue magazine, not cooking school), Sabrina returns a poised, chic, and breathtaking woman. David, engaged to a socialite, promptly falls for her. Enter the older brother, Linus Larrabee (Harrison Ford), a workaholic corporate shark who plans to sabotage the romance to save a crucial business merger. The twist, of course, is that Linus is the one who falls in love.
Where the 1954 film was breezy and cynical, Pollack’s version is more psychologically grounded. The stakes feel higher. Linus isn’t just a rich man; he’s a man haunted by his father’s legacy, on the verge of a hostile takeover, and emotionally frozen. David isn’t just a playboy; he’s a lost soul hiding behind charm. The film spends less time on witty one-liners and more on quiet looks and unspoken loneliness. sabrina 1995
Upon its release, "Sabrina 1995" received mixed reviews. Roger Ebert gave it three stars, praising the cinematography but lamenting the chemistry. However, time has been kind to the film. The core story remains intact